Campaign finance reports unveiled Thursday night showed that the group organizing to recall Democratic Sen. Evie Hudak[2] raised about $64,600 in a period from mid-October until mid-November.

The group, Recall Hudak Too[3], raked in hundreds of contributions that range from $10 to $1,000 (Newly elected state Sen. Bernie Herpin[4], R-Colorado Springs, who won his seat in the John Morse recall, contributed $1,000). The donations come from contributors nationwide. In the group’s first reporting period, it raised about $23,300.

In the same reporting period filed Thursday, the group doled out $43,700 in expenditures, with $27,500 going to the El Paso County – based TPM LLC for “Consultant & Professional services.” An inquiry late Thursday night to the Recall Hudak Too campaign for more information about TPM’s services was not immediately answered.

Another chunk of cash, about $2,844, went to Grand Junction-based Tactical Data Solutions[5], which “maintains proprietary voter, district and precinct level historic data.”

Organizers have until Dec. 3 to gather nearly 18,900 signatures in Hudak’s Arvada-based Senate District 19 to force a special election of the state lawmaker for her support of stricter Colorado gun laws. The state’s most powerful anti-gun control group, Rocky Mountain Gun Owners[6], is working closely with the Recall Hudak Too organizers.

Several news outlets, including The Denver Post[7] in October, have reported that paid signature gathers are being used in the Hudak recall.

For Hudak, her campaign — Stand With Evie[9] — has amassed nearly $25,400, with $20,000 coming from the liberal group Conservation Colorado. And the Democracy Defense Fund[10], which is backing Hudak, has received $25,000 from the Washington, D.C. based Environmental Majority.

New campaign reports for Stand with Evie and the Democracy Defense Fund are not due for several more days.

If organizers gather, and have certified the 18,900 signatures needed to force a recall, it’s likely Hudak would be lobbied by Democratic leaders to resign her seat. The unsuccessful attempt at winning the recall elections of Morse and Giron cost Democrats millions of dollars.